The Physiological Society and Wiley renew partnership

Public release date: 26-Sep-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Ben Norman sciencenewsroom@wiley.com 44-012-437-70375 Wiley

Hoboken, NJ, September 25, 2012. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., and The Physiological Society have announced the renewal of their publishing partnership, building on over eight years of collaboration. The renewed partnership will ensure the society's titles, The Journal of Physiology and Experimental Physiology, continue to develop as thought leaders of physiological research.

"Since their establishment The Society's journals have built a reputation for excellence and quality," said Professor Jonathan Ashmore, President of The Physiological Society. "Over the last eight years this reputation has grown and our partnership with Wiley has helped to build on this."

Professor Ashmore continued, "Our journals already accommodate the needs of funders and research scientists around the world, offering an open access route for those who wish to make their article available to non-subscribers through Wiley's OnlineOpen option, and all our journal content becomes free to access after 12 months. Our renewed partnership with Wiley will ensure that the journals stay at the forefront of innovation in a time of rapid evolution in academic publishing."

"The renewal of Wiley's partnership with The Physiological Society allows us to build upon almost a decade of collaboration, with new initiatives that benefit both authors and readers of these prestigious journals," said Stephen M. Smith, President and CEO, Wiley. "Together we will continue to support and promote the latest world-class physiological research through sustained innovation using new delivery channels and models."

The Journal of Physiology publishes the latest research from across the discipline, with the aim of developing our understanding of the principles and mechanisms which govern our bodies. Published since 1879, the journal's international editorial board is led by Editor-in-Chief, Professor David Paterson of Oxford University, and currently holds an Impact Factor of 4.881.

Wiley has supported the journal's role as an opinion leader with new initiatives including the publication of dedicated neuroscience issues eight of which will be published in 2012.

Experimental Physiology, edited by Professor Paul McLoughlin of University College Dublin, focuses on emerging areas of physiological and pathophysiological research, with emphasis on molecular and cellular functions. The journal holds an impact factor of 3.211 and will move to online-only publication from 2013.

Under this renewed agreement The Physiological Society and Wiley will also collaborate closely on a number of new initiatives including Wiley's role as principal sponsor of the 2013 Union of Physiological Sciences Congress.

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The Physiological Society and Wiley renew partnership

Farm Raised Salmon Need to Beef Up

/wildlife/article/45002

When it comes to farm raised fish, it doesn't pay to let them be lazy. Fish like wild salmon, tuna and eel are built for the vigorous swimming required during migration.

These fish are "uniquely adapted to a physiology of high levels of exercise performance," says Tony Farrell, who studies fish physiology in the University of British Columbia Zoology department. "Therefore when we put them in constrained environments and remove predators, the consequences are they become a little more like couch potatoes."

When these fish are raised on farms in captivity, they are prone to a variety of health problems everything from heart disease to viral infections kind of like human couch potatoes. And, just like with humans, getting more active seems to make a big difference in their health.

There's at least 50 years of research on the physiological benefits of exercise to fish, demonstrating that when fish are good swimmers, they have better cardiovascular fitness, a stronger immune system and are less prone to disease and physical deformities than their sedentary brethren. Yet very few fish farms use exercise as a way to improve the quantity and quality of their product. New research and a new book, Swimming Physiology of Fish: Towards Using Exercise to Farm a Fit Fish in Sustainable Aquaculture, are trying to persuade the commercial fish farmer to give it a try.

Farmed fish currently make up nearly half of all fish consumed, and the industry is growing rapidly. While it produces a fairly cheap source of protein, disease, waste and a decreasing supply of traditional fish feed remain problems yet to be fully solved.

Increasing survival rates even just a few percent by exercising fish not only creates a healthier environment for them, but it may translate into billions of dollars for fish farms.

Fish exercise may aid the fish farming industry financially, Farrell says, but there's another lesson as well. "Exercise, in a world that is sedentary, is beneficialeven in fish."

So what does that mean to what you get on your dinner plate? Some experts suggest that bigger, stronger, and healthier fish may also produce changes in color, texture or overall appearance that make a more attractive meal to the consumer. But there's no evidence yet that the nutritional content is affected.

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Southern Arizona Kidney Walk

Join us November 4, 2012 for our Southern Arizona Kidney Walk! This fun and inspiring community event presents an occasion for patients, transplant recipients, organ donors, families, friends, groups and businesses to come together to celebrate life and create long-term support for our Arizona patients. We would love to have your involvement! Date: Sunday, November 4, 2012 Location: Kino Sports Complex – Kino Stadium 2500 East Ajo Way Tucson, Arizona Time: 7:00am - 8:30am Registration (all walkers must sign in) 9:00am Walk begins 11:00am Walk should be ending What: Form a walk team with your family, friends and colleagues! There is no minimum donation required to walk. Of course, we encourage every walker to do their best to fundraise, as the dollars raised through the Kidney Walk benefits NKF AZ’s critical patient services and programs here in Arizona. Fund raise $100 or more and you'll receive a free Kidney Walk T-shirt! Unable to attend? You can still create your very own online Walk Team! For more details visit http://www.azkidney.org

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Canines take over Purdue’s campus

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (WLFI) - Professor of Veterinary Physiology Dr. Skip Jackson started the annual event in 1969.

In the past the event has always been free but this year veterinarian students are raising money for a good cause. All proceeds from the 5-K will go to PetSafe, a program that provides veterinary care and housing for animals owned by families in crisis.

Veterinary student Emily Rudman and Jackson said this year's Dog Jog is a big success.

"Well, we've usually only had two or three dogs run but it's good to see more dogs this year and more people with their pets," Jackson said

"It feels pretty good to see it all coming together right now and seeing everybody putting their bandanas on their dogs and getting ready to race. It's really great to see everybody out here," Rudman said.

Registration cost five dollars for dogs and $20 for their owners.

Rudman said one Dog Jog participant ran with six dogs through Purdue's campus.

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Canines take over Purdue's campus

Under Controlled: Why the New GMO Panic Is More Sensational Than Sense | The Crux

Scicurious is a PhD in Physiology, and is currently a postdoc in biomedical research. Follow on Twitter @Scicurious and read her blogs at Scientific American and at Neurotic Physiology.

A new toxicology study states that rats eating genetically modified food and the weedkiller Roundup develop huge tumors and die. But many scientists beg to differ, and a close look at the study shows why.

Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) have always been a controversial topic. On the one hand are the many benefits: the higher crop yields from pesticide- and insect-resistant crops, and the nutritional modifications that can make such a difference in malnourished populations. On the other side is the question that concerns many people: We are modifying the genes of our food, and what does that mean for our health? These are important question, but the new study claiming to answer them misses the mark. It has many horrifying pictures of rats with tumors, but without knowledge about the control rats, what do those tumors mean? Possibly, nothing at all.

The recent study, from the Journal of Food and Chemical Toxicology has fueled the worst fears of the GMO debate. The study, by Italian and French groups, evaluated groups of rats fed different concentrations of maize (corn) tolerant to Roundup or Roundup alone, over a two year period, the longest type of toxicology study. (For an example of one performed in the U.S., see here.) The group looked at the mortality rates in the aging rats, as well as the causes of death, and took multiple samples to assess kidney, liver, and hormonal function.

The presented results look like a toxicologists nightmare. The authors reported high rates of tumor development in the rats fed Roundup and the Roundup-tolerant maize. There are figures of rats with visible tumors, and graphs showing death rates that appear to begin early in the rats lifespan. The media of course picked up on it, and one site in particular has spawned some reports that sound like mass hysteria. It was the first study showing that genetically modified foods could produce tumors at all, let alone the incredibly drastic ones shown in the paper.

But can GMOs really produce such huge tumors? This paper isnt convincing. Following the release of the study, numerous scientists questioned the findings, citing anomalies throughout the paper that normally should have been corrected or resolved through the peer-review process. In particular, there are problems with the statistics performed on the data, the way the data were presented, and the numbers and types of animals used in the study.

First, the numbers. The authors examined groups of male and female rats in four different conditions: GMO food alone, GMO + Roundup, Roundup alone, and controls (normal food with no Roundup). For each experimental condition, there were three different doses of either the GMO maize (as a percent of the diet), Roundup, or both; the amount of doses of Roundup were all well below the approved doses. The 20 groups each contained 10 individuals, for a full total of 200 rats (100 male and 100 female). While 10 rats per condition might seem low, in a power analysis used to detect differences in response to, say a Roundup and non-Roundup condition, this would probably be OK. But how many final comparisons were the authors making? In the end, the authors compared each experimental condition to the same group of control rats, something that could severely bias the results. In most well-performed experiments, there would be a separate group of control rats for each condition, the GMO food alone, the GMO + Roundup, and the Roundup alone. The controls used for the study, as Anthony Trewavas, a cell biologist at the University of Edinburgh, pointed out in a press release response, are inadequate to make any deduction.

Then of course, there is the question of the animals themselves. Who were these rats? As it turns out, the rats used in the study were the Sprague Dawley rat strain, a widely used strain in biomedical and behavioral research. Unfortunately, this strain is prone to specific diseasesincluding the development of tumors. Up to 57% of female Sprague Dawley rats have been shown in other studies to develop tumors, especially mammary tumors, spontaneously. Males develop tumors at fairly high incidence as well. But in their striking mortality numbers for the study, showing the type and incidence of tumor development, the authors of the study do not show any of the control groups, and so we cannot actually compare the death rates of any of the GMO and Roundup exposures to controls. Tom Sanders, head of the Nutritional Sciences Research Division at Kings College London, pointed this fact out in the press-release response. Most toxicology studies are terminated at normal lifespan i.e. 2 years. Immortality is not an alternative. A careful read of the findings shows that the control group suffered a spontaneous death rate of 30% for males and 20% for females. But the authors do not state what caused the death. Did the dead animals develop tumors? Did control animals that survived develop tumors? We dont know. The authors did not show us.

Not only do they not show us, they do not present statistics to tell us the full story. In comparison to the 50% male death rate for the GMO maize dietis a 30% death rate in controls any better? There are no statistical analyses of how death rates compare between the different treatment groups and controls, only percentages. The way the data were analyzed is also unusual and highly complicated. This struck many of the scientists who read the study (including me) as odd. When comparing groups of doses as these authors did, there are simple enough statistical tests that will easily differentiate among the groups. Why were these tests not used? Why were the authors required to develop a highly convoluted analysis for something as simple as mortality rate?

In the end, while the results of the study look very drastic, there are too many issues to conclude that GMO maize and Roundup cause tumor formation. All we can really conclude is that rats who are prone to develop tumorsdevelop tumors, whether they are fed GMO maize, Roundup, both, or neither. In addition to the problems with the paper itself, the results contradicts a large amount of literature showing now difference in health consequences following consumption of GMOs. The potential health consequences of roundup exposure and GMOs should be carefully studied and evaluated, but studies like this one do not provide the answers, and only add to the hype.

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Under Controlled: Why the New GMO Panic Is More Sensational Than Sense | The Crux

Purple corn extracts show benefits for diabetic’s kidney health

Compounds in purple corn may protect against the development of the kidney condition diabetic nephropathy, one of the most serious complications related to diabetes, suggests new research.

Scientists from Hallym University in Korea report in the American Journal of Physiology Renal Physiology that anthocyanin-rich purple corn may inhibit multiple pathways involved in the development of diabetic nephropathy.

The research also suggests that supplementation with purple corn anthocyanins may be an important strategy in preventing renal vascular disease in type-2 diabetes, they added.

The researchers cultured cells in the lab in solutions of varying concentrations of anthocyanins, and then assessed for level of monocyte-endothelial cell adhesion, a major factor in the hardening of the glomerulus in the kidney of diabetics (diabetic glomerulosclerosis). This was corroborated with data from experiments with lab mice fed a diet supplemented with the purple corn extracts for eight weeks.

Results showed that the anthocyanins inhibited pathways that led to diabetic glomerulosclerosis, as well as the induction of some inflammatory processes in the mice.

Source: American Journal of Physiology Renal Physiology Published online ahead of print, doi: 10.1152/ajprenal.00106.2012 Purple corn anthocyanins inhibit diabetes-associated glomerular monocyte activation and macrophage infiltration Authors: M-K. Kang, J. Li, J-L. Kim, J-H. Gong, et al.

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Surge at Tampa Bay community colleges ends

Community college enrollment has started to decline, signaling a possible end to the recession-fueled boom that sent large numbers of local job-seekers back to classrooms.

Enrollment statewide began leveling off last year, but area colleges are now seeing significant dips in their fall term head counts.

The number of students enrolled so far this fall is down 4.4 percent at Hillsborough Community College and 2.5 percent at St. Petersburg College. Pasco-Hernando Community College is seeing an even steeper decline about 8 percent.

Those decreases follow explosive growth double-digit percentages in some years at all three colleges in recent years.

College officials and others offer a variety of explanations for the declines, which show up in both the number of students and the number of credit hours being taken:

Prospective students must work a variety of part-time jobs, leaving little time for classes. The people who returned to college at the height of the recession have completed their programs. Changes to federal financial aid regulations have reduced awards for certain students.

"We think it has a lot to do with students just having to work. That's why they're taking fewer credit hours," said Pat Rinard, St. Petersburg College's associate vice president for enrollment management. "They're piecing together work just to make ends meet."

Those jobs may not be of the high-paying variety, either. At Valencia College in Orlando, for instance, officials attribute a slight drop-off in enrollment to hiring by theme parks.

At Brevard College, where fall enrollment is off by 2.4 percent from last year, officials say the long-planned shutdown of the shuttle program sent many space industry workers back to school in recent years. Now those students have wrapped up their studies, which might account for the decline, said spokesman John Glisch.

Gary Sligh, president of the Association of Florida Colleges, said that people also may be staying out of school because they are finding decent-paying jobs or, at least, think they can.

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Surge at Tampa Bay community colleges ends

Undergraduate Research Assistants

Dr. Raison (FSHD & College of Medicine, Psychiatry) is looking for Undergraduate Research Assistants to help on a research study that will examine the effect of exposure to infrared light on major depressive disorder (MDD). As an Undergraduate Research Assistant you will: - Gain invaluable research experience, which is important for those of you interested in applying to Graduate School - Be able to register for up to 3 units of Directed Research under Dr. Raison What is required from you: -Up to 10 hours per week (flexible) -1 year commitment (Fall 2012 and Spring 2013) *Undergraduates who have had a course in research methods are preferred. IF INTERESTED: please email Elizabeth Gleason (egleason@psychiartry.arizona.edu), Project Coordinator, with a current resume no later than Monday, September 10th. Please be sure to include your Undergraduate G.P.A. on your resume. In the email please: (1) describe any relevant research experience you may have and (2) why you are interested in joining the lab and gaining research experience.

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Houdini gives Hammond-Oliver students hands-on experience

AP photoHammond-Oliver High School veterinary tech students (from left) Rachel Miller and Gretchen Vilas try to entice Houdini into eating some feed at the school on Wednesday. The calf recently underwent emergency surgery and is being cared for by the students.

A group of Bryan seniors spent Wednesday morning caring and tending to a 150-pound calf named Houdini while learning about the physiology of cattle.

Whenever we take his bottle away after hes finished he gets a little cranky, said 17-year-old Johanna Krauter with a smile, after helping feed the four-week-old.

The Hammond-Oliver High School for Human Sciences students began transitioning the calf from its bottle to solid food as another student took its temperature 101.2 degrees and the rest examined its recent 10 inches of sutures to ensure there was no infection.

The veterinary medical assisting class covers large animal topics, including the anatomy and physiology of different livestock, and offers the students time to take internships. Teacher Sue Elliott, whos overseeing the care of Houdini, said the school encourages the students to put in 500 hours at a veterinary clinic or animal shelter to work toward becoming a certified veterinary assistant.

Elliott, who has been teaching the course for four years and has 36 years of classroom experience, said the timing of Houdinis birth couldnt have been more perfect. The calf was born right before school returned to session from the summer months, and Elliott has been able to load up and bring Houdini with her to work each day from Wellborn and take him home again after school.

I love animals so if I can just pass that on a little bit then thats good enough for me, she said. A lot of kids dont realize where their food comes from, so we can talk about how this is what hes raised for and compare that to dairy cattle and the different characteristics theyre bred for.

The students take turns haltering the calf and unloading him from the trailer to bring into a pin that was retrofitted for him behind the campus. Elliott said theres a lot of science in agriculture and shes able to cover a vast array of topics with the students just by having the Brahman available to the class.

When a Brahman is not happy or doesnt want to do anything, they are worse than a spoiled child, she said with a laugh.

Hes had an already challenging life, she said. When he was born, the veterinarian and technicians believed him dead until he wrinkled up his nose, she said.

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Houdini gives Hammond-Oliver students hands-on experience

Research and Markets: Fish Physiology: Zebrafish, Vol 29 Part No. 29

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/3mmw2x/fish_physiology_z) has announced the addition of Elsevier Science and Technology's new report "Fish Physiology: Zebrafish, Vol 29 Part No. 29" to their offering.

This cutting-edge resource includes up-to-date information on zebrafish physiology and the tools used to study it, not only as a model species for studies of other vertebrates but with application for studies of human disease and aquatic toxicology.

The utility of zebrafish for physiological research is based on several key features including:

i) a "fully" sequenced genome

ii) rapid (-3 month) generation times)

iii) their capacity to produce large numbers of externally fertilized eggs

iv) optical transparency of embryos and larvae

v) the applicability of reverse and forward genetics to assess gene function.

Gene knockdown in embryos and the production of transgenic strains are now standard techniques being used to assess physiology. This book will be of keen interest not only to the typical readers of Fish Physiology but also to biomedical researchers, toxicologists and developmental biologists.

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Research and Markets: Fish Physiology: Zebrafish, Vol 29 Part No. 29

Are You a Pre-Health Student?

Do you want to become more involved around campus and the community while becoming more exposed to the healthcare field? You should consider joining Alpha Epsilon Delta, a pre-health honorary at the U of A. We have philanthropy, social and fundraising events as well as exclusive shadowing opportunities and speakers from the health professions at every meeting. Get exclusive opportunities to win scholarships for test prep courses (up to $2000 for Kaplan and Princeton) or $500 cash scholarships. It is a great way for pre-med, pre-pharmacy, public health majors, pre-nursing, pre-dental, and any other pre-health field to network with professionals and other students who have similar interests and are willing to help you along your career path. Our first meeting is September 4th at 5pm at Bio Science West. Please visit our website at http://www.alphaepsilondelta.com or add our orgsync page https://orgsync.com/2759/chapter for information on the application, or email Aed_vp@yahoo.com with any questions.

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H. Samuel Case, McDaniel professor

H. Samuel Case, who taught human physiology and exercise science at what is now McDaniel College for four decades, died Aug. 22 of complications from leukemia at Carroll Hospice Center's Dove House in Westminster.

The longtime Westminster resident was 70.

"I've been here for two years, but I very quickly came to see how much Sam embodied the essence of McDaniel College. His death is such a painful loss, " said Roger Casey, president of the college.

"In my speeches to prospective students, I tell them that the faculty is not in your life for just four years, but 40. And I got that from observing Sam," he said. "He lived life to the fullest, and his death reminds us of our own mortality and that we only have a short time to make a difference, as Sam did."

"Sam's life is a life worth celebrating. He was a fine human being and totally selfless," said Joan Develin Coley, former McDaniel College president and friend of 40 years.

"When I think of Sam, he led a life that was exemplary and one of service. He never needed or wanted to toot his own horn," she said. "People were just drawn to him. The students loved him and the faculty loved him."

The son of a farmer and an educator, Howard Samuel Case, who never used his first name, was born and raised in Three Bridges, N.J.

After graduating in 1959 from Hunterdon Central Regional High School in Flemington, N.J., where he played football and wrestled, he earned a bachelor's degree in 1963 in physical education at what was then Western Maryland College.

"The starting line of his career emerged by accident while he was still an undergraduate at Western Maryland College," said Joyce Muller, associate vice president of communications and marketing at McDaniel.

"He suffered a concussion while playing football in his sophomore year and opted to assist with coaching, and by the time he graduated, had racked up three years of coaching experience," said Ms. Muller.

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Fitting Kv potassium channels in the PIP2 puzzle

Public release date: 27-Aug-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Rita Sullivan King news@rupress.org 212-327-8603 Rockefeller University Press

A recent study in the Journal of General Physiology brings new insights to an area of ion channel regulation: whether voltage-gated potassium (Kv) channels can be regulated by physiological changes to PIP2.

Potassium channels, microscopic pores that allow potassium ions to cross cell membranes, are crucial to such diverse processes as conduction of the nerve impulse, regulation of the heartbeat, and the secretion of hormones such as insulin. PIP2, a minor phospholipid component of cell membranes, regulates the activity of various proteins in the cell membrane, and previous studies have indicated that it might be a very important regulator of such channels. To probe the cell signaling roles of PIP2 under physiological conditions, Bertil Hille (University of Washington) and colleagues used a set of sophisticated molecular tools to rapidly deplete PIP2 in the membranes of intact cells and simultaneously monitor the PIP2 changes that occurred. Using this approach, they confirmed previous studies showing that the activity of "inward rectifier" potassium channels was strongly dependent on PIP2. Surprisingly, however, they found that various members of the Kv channel family thought to be PIP2 sensitive on the basis of studies that analyzed their activity in isolated patches of cell membrane were, in fact, unaffected by PIP2 depletion. Thus, the group demonstrated that large PIP2 changes at the membranes of intact cells did not modulate the function of these Kv channels, contrary to expectations.

According to Donald Hilgemann (UT Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas) in commentary appearing in the September 2012 issue of JGP, the findings are an important step forward in our understanding of PIP2 effects on Kv channels. Furthermore, the tools employed by the Hille group can now be used to address questions about PIP2 functions in other cellular processes. In addition to its complex roles in cytoskeleton regulation and endocytosis, PIP2 appears to influence many cell membrane processes, including the formation of membrane domains, membrane budding, and membrane turnover.

###

About The Journal of General Physiology

Founded in 1918, The Journal of General Physiology (JGP) is published by The Rockefeller University Press. All editorial decisions on manuscripts submitted are made by active scientists. JGP content is posted to PubMed Central, where it is available to the public for free six months after publication. Authors retain copyright of their published works and third parties may reuse the content for non-commercial purposes under a creative commons license. For more information, please visit http://www.jgp.org.

Hilgemann, D.W., et al. 2012. J. Gen. Physiol. doi:10.1085/jgp.201210874. Kruse, M., G.R.V. Hammond, and B. Hille. 2012. J. Gen. Physiol. doi:10.1085/jgp.201210806.

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Fitting Kv potassium channels in the PIP2 puzzle

Study: For Body Fat, 30 Minutes of Exercise as Good as 60

Research in the American Journal of Physiology found that Danish men lost more weight with a half hour of daily exercise than they did with a full hour; their body fat remained the same in both cases. Moderation wins again.

PROBLEM: Creating a negative energy balance -- burning off more than you take in -- is the not-so-secret key to successful weight loss. Dieters, however, often find that eating less triggers compensatory mechanisms, such as increased appetite and a slowed metabolism, that make this balance difficult to maintain. Looking at the other side of this equation, is there an infinitely positive relationship between amount of exercise and pounds shed? Or is there a certain point where the compensatory mechanisms kick in, so that extra time on the treadmill ceases to affect weight loss?

METHODOLOGY: Sixtymoderately overweight Danish men were randomly assigned to either a moderate or high-dose aerobic routine of running, biking, or rowing. The moderate exercisers burned 300 calories per day, which took about 30 minutes, while the high-dose group burned 600 calories, which, predictably, took about twice as long. The subjects' body composition was monitored throughout the 13-week experiment, as were their compensatory behaviors (food intake and non-exercise physical activity). Their accumulated energy balance was calculated from their changes in body composition.

RESULTS: The group that practiced moderate exercise lost an average of 7.9 lbs in body weight, while the group that worked harder only lost an average of 6.0 lbs. Both saw similar losses in fat mass (about 8.8 lbs in the moderate group, and 8.3 pounds in the high-dose group). Researchers measured no significant difference in caloric intake or non-exercise energy expenditure.

CONCLUSION: Comparingmen who exercised for half an hour each day to men who worked out for twice as long, less exercise was actually associated with greater weight loss, and no significant difference infat loss. So the moderate exercisers got a lot more for their effort.

IMPLICATIONS: "Lose more weight in half the time" sounds like the kind of pitch that can get you into trouble. And the researchers aren't sure exactly why they got the results that they did. They suggest that less exercise may be associated with a greater willingness to engage in other forms of physical activity throughout the day that they did not measure, or that the more intense workouts may have lead to more compensatory food intake (though, within the limits of this study, they measured no difference). This calls to light the interplay of all the variables that go into weight loss and gain, and how, when factored in the bigger picture of life and physiology and behavioral psychology and taco rewards, more exercise isn't always better.

The full study, "Body fat loss and compensatory mechanisms in response to different doses of aerobic exercise -- a randomized controlled trial in overweight sedentary males," is published in the American Journal of Physiology.

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Study: For Body Fat, 30 Minutes of Exercise as Good as 60

Fulbright Information Session 8/28

Are you a graduating senior, graduate student, or alumnus who would like to spend a year outside of the U.S., either serving as an English Teaching Assistant or taking courses and/or doing research? Consider applying for the Fulbright U.S. Student Program. The campus deadline for the Fulbright U.S. Student Program is less than a month away, but there's still time to put together a competitive application. The Office of Nationally Competitive Scholarships will be holding one last information session for this year's application cycle: Fulbright U.S. Student Program Information Session Tuesday, August 28 @ 2:30pm Room to be determined Please RSVP to Dr. Jeff Thibert at thibert@email.arizona.edu to receive an update on the room location. You're welcome to come even if you're not eligible to apply this year. You can also contact Dr. Thibert if you cannot attend but would like more information. Finally, if you're currently working on an application, but have not yet heard from Dr.Thibert, send him an email right away.

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Todd Akin and the Anti-Science House Science Committee

Aside from the sheer biological ludicrousness of Todd Akins ideas on female physiology, one unsettling subplot to the debacle is his presence on the House of Committee on Science, Space and Technology.

Thats right: A man who, to put it gently, ignores what science tells us about how babies are made, helps shape the future of science in America. It would be shocking, but for the fact that many of the committees GOP members have spent the last several years displaying comparable contempt for climate science.

Now, theres no question that climate change is less well understood than human reproduction. The rate at which warming permafrost will release methane is open for debate, whereas its a long-settled fact that women can become pregnant from rape. But in both cases, there exists a factual proposition that can be studied through observation and hypothesis-testing and its the scientific method itself thats ultimately under attack in the House science committee.

The committees chair, Ralph Hall (R-Texas), lumps global freezing together with global warming, which he doesnt believe humans can significantly impact because I dont think we can control what God controls. Dana Rohrbacher (R-CA) thinks cutting down trees reduces levels of greenhouse gases they absorb. Mo Brooks (R-AL) still trots out the debunked notion that a scientific consensus existed in the 1970s on global cooling, which he portrays as a scare concocted by scientists in order to generate funds for their pet projects.

'We ought to have some believable science.'

Broun, who likens the CDCs encouragement of fruit and vegetable consumption to socialism of the highest order, is also seen by some people as anti-scientific for asserting that an embryo is a human being, though that criticism is unfair: When life begins, and whether and how to value the existence of an embryo, are moral questions, and science cant answer them except to contrast the properties of embryos with people.

Also tarred as anti-scientific are votes against funding certain types of research, from studies on embryonic stem cells to sociology, government support of which has been recently attacked. Funding, however, is ultimately a political decision. Its possible to reject support for certain scientific endeavors without denying the fundamental validity of science itself, just as its possible to think climate change isnt a terrible problem while respecting the science describing it.

But when it comes to climate and the House science committee, the rhetoric shows that its about the validity. And whatever Ralph Hall purports to support when he says, Im not anti-science, Im pro-science. But we ought to have some believable science, its not science.

Note: In looking for examples of scientifically unsupportable statements by members of the House science committee, every single anecdote involved statements by Republicans. Wired would be happy to update the article with examples of statements by Democratic members. If you have any, please add in the comments section.

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Todd Akin and the Anti-Science House Science Committee

A Robot Helps Listen In on Brain Cell Chatter

By Gary Stix| August 23, 2012 |

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Erwin Neher and Bert Sakmann received the Nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology in 1991 for their development of the patch-clamp technique, which records currents coursing through single ion channels in cells. For neuroscientists, one form of this technique has become the gold standard for probing information about the goings-on inside a cell. It can not only track electrical activity but determine cell shape (through the use of dyes) and even determine which genes have switched on.

The manual manipulation of the micropipette used for recording requires such delicate handling that only a small number of laboratories actually use the technique to study the living brain. A robot is now rushing to the rescue of legions of befuddled graduate students.

A collaboration between researchers at the laboratory of Ed Boyden at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and that of Craig Forest at the Georgia Institute of Technology has devised an automated method for placing the pipette and making recordings that will make this research method more commonplace.

The two labs published on their work in the May 6 Nature Methods. (Scientific American is part of the Nature Publishing Group.) The new technique may save graduate students the several months of toil that it takes to learn the techniqueand it may help with the ongoing efforts to classify the multitude of cell types in the brain. Automated whole patch clamping will also be deployed in studying brain diseases like Parkinsons and epilepsy. Boyden and Forests group has created a video that takes you step-by-step into the lab to see how this new technique works. Watch here.

Image Source: The Boyden Lab

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A Robot Helps Listen In on Brain Cell Chatter